Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
With everybody else here today, I want to express our appreciation for the presence of these witnesses and the very useful testimony they are giving. It's very helpful to the committee.
On that last point, Mr. Marks, it seems to me that it's clear in the Public Health Agency of Canada Act that when you have a public health emergency of some kind that affects people in more than one province, there is a jurisdiction and a responsibility that then falls at the federal level. It is up to the Government of Canada, obviously in consultation with the provinces and a lot of other groups, to make sure that the guidance that's given about sequencing is as clear, proper, and appropriate as it can be. Within that national guideline, there is flexibility for provinces to make local decisions if their circumstances are dramatically different. Obviously, guidance is guidance. It's not a legally binding rule, but it is helpful to say at the national level that, in principle, all other things being equal, this is the order that seems to be the most appropriate.
You, of course, have made a very powerful case today for a high-priority ranking for first responders.
I was taken in the testimony a couple of days ago by the Public Health Agency officials. It didn't seem to be clear that they had a grasp of the point that firefighters do a variety of different things. You fight fires, thank God, but you also are first responders, along with your colleagues, the EMT folks and others. In that capacity, you function very much like front-line health care workers. If it weren't for you on the scene of some very dangerous situations, some of those victims would not actually get to the doctors and nurses who are waiting for them in the emergency rooms.
What we're being asked to do here is to go back uphill to the origin of the problem and to make sure that you're dealing with the disease situations ab initio and not just coming in partway through. I think your points there are very well taken.
I have three questions. One is very specific to the EMTs. I'm happy to hear about the situation in Saskatoon.
I wonder, Mr. Hills, if you could comment on the situation. Pardon me for being parochial, but in Regina as well...was this a Saskatchewan situation you were describing, where you had access to the vaccines, or was that Saskatoon-specific?
Let me just ask the other two questions and then I'll allow you a full response.
Secondly, I wonder if we could have a description of some of the circumstances at the scenes of difficult accidents and so forth that you have to deal with. How risky and dangerous and exposed to disease and infection are your members actually in real-life circumstances?
Finally, on this issue of consultation, I'm glad to hear that PHAC has been in touch with the IAFF in the last 24 hours. But would all of you and your organizations expect to be consulted in this process of developing a new protocol on vaccine sequencing by the Public Health Agency as they are putting together their recommendations for new protocols about public sequencing?